Greenwich.co.uk

Greenwich news and information

  • News
  • Sport
  • Blogs
  • Hotels in Greenwich
    • Serviced Apartments in Greenwich
  • Visiting
    • Things to Do in Greenwich
  • Greenwich Books
  • Greenwich Collectibles
  • Events
    • Add an Event
You are here: Greenwich / Sport

Kevin Nolan’s Match Report: Birmingham v Charlton (15/07/2020)

July 16, 2020 By Kevin Nolan

Birmingham 1 (Jutkiewicz 90+3 Charlton 1 (Bonne 58).

By Kevin Nolan off Valley Pass.

Though dealt another sickening body blow by Lukas Jutkiewicz’s added time equaliser, Charlton are not done for yet. This relegation scrap is far from over. Before it’s resolved, there will be more than one twist, more than one turn, until the music stops and the final scramble for chairs begins.
Charlton are being quoted as warm favourites to go down despite sitting two points (not to mention an unassailable goal difference) above the drop zone with only two games to play. Daunting assignments against surprise packets Wigan Athletic and champions-elect Leeds United account for the negativity which followed this latest setback. Wigan are hotter than pistols right now while Leeds, far from easing up as fervently hoped, will be seeking to use Charlton as the cherry on their title-winning cake. On paper, the Addicks are clearly not expected to add to their current points total of 47; on honest-to-goodness grass, they stand a chance.

A newly determined Charlton did enough -on reflection perhaps not quite enough – to win this crucial game. As usual, sturdy defending, with goalkeeper Dillon Phillips adding a brilliant penalty save to his customary excellence, underpinned their performance, while there were several chances to consolidate the 58th minute lead provided by Macauley Bonne’s 10th goal of the season. The scorer himself squandered opportunities to double the lead and Aiden McGeady, continuing the encouraging improvement in his form, hit a post with a cleverly aimed snapshot. But the coup-de-grace proved elusive and the visitors paid a costly price for their chronic failure to seal the deal. As the minutes ticked by, protecting their lead became the pressing priority; bitter experience hardly inspired confidence in their ability to do so. As world weary Lee Bowyer commented “we can’t see a game out, we don’t manage it well.”

Legs were becoming heavy and concentration faltered as 17 year-old prodigy Jude Bellingham accelerated into Charlton’s penalty area and crossed on the run from the left. At the near post, Phillips kept out Gary Gardner’s low shot but Jutkiewicz poked home a cruel equaliser off the woodwork. The sucker punch briefly knocked the stuffing out of the Addicks and they were indebted to Phillips for clawing clear a deceptively drifting cross in the final minute. This was a desperately disappointing draw but the point might yet keep them up when the calculators are put to use next Wednesday.

Far from defensive in their approach, at least until City’s desperation drove them back to their 18-yard line, Charlton played some nice stuff, never more so than when Bonne completed a scintillating move to give them the lead just before the hour mark. Jonny Williams, as usual the target for a series of cynical fouls, timed a delicious pass inside right back Maxime Colin to send Alfie Doughty surging to the left byline. The speedy wingback’s hard-drived centre left Bonne the easy task of tapping past Lee Camp with the Midlanders’ defence a spreadeagled mess

Phillips preserved the lead by reacting splendidly to turn aside Ivan Sunjic’s volley as it zipped through a thicket of legs. But the outstanding young keeper’s first half penalty save from Scott Hogan for so long promised to be the turning point on which this game revolved. Left exposed by Josh Cullen’s disastrously underpowered backpass, he clipped Jutkiewicz as they came together for the 50-50 ball and was penalised by referee David Webb. Guessing Hogan’s intentions correctly, Phillips plunged to his right to save and deserved the luck he got as Hogan inexplicably shovelled the rebound over the bar from five yards.

Heartened by Bonne’s opener, meanwhile, the Addicks sought to double their advantage. Set up by the irrepressible Doughty, McGeady found space for a curling potshot which rebounded harmlessly off Camp’s right hand post. Minutes later, belligerent substitute Chuks Aneke disdainfully broke through two overpowered defenders to lay on a point blank chance which Bonne hammered directly at Camp. “Missing clear chances from four yards out in the middle of the goal…you miss things like that, you don’t win” was frustrated boss Bowyer’s reaction to his side’s profligacy.

Quite so… but the decks are cleared for the closing acts of this troubled, marathon season. Having persevered through a crippling injury list, expensive backroom thievery and the treacherous dive overboard of three rats, Bowyer’s Boys of Summer deserve credit for taking the battle to survive into the final reckoning. They’re fighting their hearts out for our club. Let’s not give up on them now.

Birmingham: Camp, Pederson, Roberts, Dean, Colin, Sunjic (Kieftenbeld 73), Gardner, Crowley (Boyd-Munce 90), Bela (Bellingham 59), Hoan (Reid 59), Jutkiewicz. Not used: Trueman, Harding, Gordon, Burke, Fernandez. Booked: Gardner, Crowley.

Charlton: Phillips, Lockyer, Pearce, Doughty (Purrington 77), Field (Pratley 77), Cullen, Williams (Morgan 77), McGeady (Sarr 85), Hemed (Aneke 65), Bonne. Not used: Amos, Oshilaja, Forster-Caskey, Davison. Booked: Phillips.

Referee: David Webb. 

Filed Under: Sport

Kevin Nolan’s Match Report: Brentford v Charlton (7/7/2020)

July 8, 2020 By Kevin Nolan

Brentford 2 (Benrahma, 75 pen, Pinnock 85) Charlton 1 (Bonne 8)

By Kevin Nolan…off the telly.

For the second time within four days, Charlton were dealt a sickening late blow -on this occasion two of them inside the last quarter hour -which cost them priceless points in their apparently endless struggle to stay in the Championship. The gutsy resistance they offered to arguably the best side in the division should hopefully give them heart to tackle the four-game run-in which kicks off on Saturday at The Valley against Reading and ends on Wednesday July 22nd at Elland Road, where they face champions-elect Leeds United (a big shout-out by the way for Bielsa’s Boys, bless their big hearts, in their gallant bid to beat Stoke City tomorrow).

Charlton’s warweary fans, meanwhile, will find it impossible to forget the dramatic climax to this exhausting season, which began so brightly, hit the skids as the injury list mounted and then took several turns for the worse on and off the field. Boardroom knavery dictated the narrative for a while as a loudmouthed gaggle of spivs vied to pick apart a special old club for their own ends. Results inevitably suffered and culminated in the damaging 1-0 home defeat to Middlesbrough which left them two points adrift in the relegation zone before Covid-19 intervened – perhaps an irrelevant silver lining under the grisly circumstances.

With the threat of a horror called PPG hanging over them for several months, the Addicks were instead handed a fighting chance to save themselves over a nine-game mini-season. At which point self-serving striker Lyle Taylor chose his time to lead a mutiny, including in its ranks stalwart defender Chris Solly and an also-ran called David Davis, a trio of recalcitrants who declined to stand alongside their mates as push came to shove. Solly wasn’t expected to feature in Lee Bowyer’s plans anyway and somewhat needlessly besmirched a fine reputation by his refusal to make himself available. Most Charlton fans would fail to recognise the useless Davis if they bumped into him in the street. Not so Taylor, whose effortless affability and approachability proved to be a hollow sham.

You know the shameful details anyway but repetition of them brings us neatly to the fifth game of the “season” at Griffin Park where the Addicks got off to the perfect start with the best goal of the evening. Jonny Williams’s quick dart and measured pass sent Alfie Doughty clear on the left to cross accurately to the far post, where Jake Forster-Caskey outjumped his marker and nodded back across goal. Beating David Raya to the ball, Macauley Bonne headed home his ninth goal of his inaugural campaign, the first by Charlton from post-lockdown open play and the first scored by a recognised strikeIf they were daunted by falling behind, Brentford showed no signs of discouragement. Blessed with an abundance of attacking talent, they mounted drip-drip pressure on their visitors, interrupted briefly by the scare they received soon after Bonne’s goal. Josh Cullen’s inswinging left-wing corner eluded Raya and bounced off the bar to Jason Pearce, whose improvised volley also clipped the bar on its way to safety. Apart from one or two bits and pieces, that was the end of Charlton as an attacking force. Driven back by the Bees’ relentless assault, they fought valiantly to stem the red-and-striped tide masterminded by Said Benrahma and lent important width by the excellent Josh DaSilva and Christian Norsgaard. Brentford’s direct efforts on goal were actually few, the best of them drawing sharp saves from Dillon Phillips from Benrahma and DaSilva. With prolific scorer Ollie Watkins kept quiet for the second time this season, the South Londoners remained intact until the clock ticked into a one-sided game’s final quarter hour. Even then, the South West Londoners’ breakthrough was tainted by controversy.

There appeared to be only fleeting contact as Cullen and Benrahma came together inside the penalty area to dispute DaSilva’s cross but the crafty Algerian made the most of what there was and hit the turf dramatically. You’ve seen ’em given, you’ve seen ’em not given but Beeskeeping referee John Brooks was more than ready to don his black cap. Benrahma recovered from his awkward tumble and equalised coolly from the spot.
The only issue now was whether Lee Bowyer’s band of battlers could hold out for a prized point. Sadly this proved beyond them with five minutes remaining. Under intolerable pressure, they were unable to stop DaSilva’s right wing cross at source and equally incapable of preventing Ethan Pinnock from bullying the ball past Phillips. Hearts were temporarily broken for a second time within four days.

Beaten but unbowed, Bowyer’s stubborn bunch will continue to give survival their best shot. The manager can do his bit by naming his best team against Reading. Assuming Sam Field, who again limped off, is unfit, Darren Pratley will come back while room must be found again for Williams, Doughty and the inimitable Naby Sarr. With Forster-Caskey expected to be rested, possibly he will partner Bonne with Tomas Hemed (assuming he’s fit) with the message to take it to Reading. If we’re meant to go down, let’s quit the scene with a bang not a whimper. This might be a space worth continuing to watch.

Brentford: Raya, Henry, Pinnock, Norsgaard, Jensen (Mercondes 61), Benrahma, Watkins, DaSilva, Jansson, Mbeumo (Dervisloglu 61), Rasmussen (Dalsgaard 61). Not used: Daniels, Thompson,Valencia, Jeanvier, Fosu, Zemburek. Booked: Dervisloglu.

Charlton: Phillips, Matthews, Lockyer, Pearce, Sarr, Doughty (Oshilaja 71), Forster-Caskey (Morgan 71), Cullen, Field (Pratley), Williams (Lapslie 56), Bonne (Aneke 79). Not used: Amos, Purrington, McGeady, Davison. Booked: Cullen

Referee: John Brooks

Filed Under: Sport

Kevin Nolan’s Match Report: Charlton v QPR (27/06/2020)

June 28, 2020 By Kevin Nolan

Charlton 1 (Pratley 12) QPR 0

By a nerve-wracked Kevin Nolan and his equally stressed computer.

A second post-lockdown 1-0 victory boosted Charlton’s hopes of avoiding immediate relegation back to League One, from the horrors of which they were delivered a year ago at Wembley. Both performances were similar, each hinging on an early setpiece goal which hindsight, with its usual wise-after-the-event cockiness, assures us was capably defended but during which identically unpleasant, tension-charged second halves reduced sofa-bound fans to gibbering wrecks.

If the Addicks stave off relegation, the depleted squad responsible for reaching the promised land will be remembered with affection and gratitude by their fearful fans. Making light of the defection of a talented top scorer, whose name is now irrelevant, and of lesser importance the disloyalty of Chris Solly and David Davis, they have bonded in the club’s interest and have given themselves every chance of making it to safety. There are tough tests still ahead but you’d be wise not to bet against them.
Scorers of Charlton’s vital goals were a pair of grizzled veterans who have, as they say, been around the block once or twice and seen a thing or two on the way. The manner in which defender Jason Pearce risked life and limb to bully home Tomas Hemed’s backheader at Hull was typical of the skipper’s unstinting commitment. Pearce has his detractors but while he continues to put up, they need to shut up.

Defensive midfield stalwart Darren Pratley doesn’t score often but his goals tend to be important ones. His quick response to Doncaster Rovers’ third goal in last season’s semi-final second leg set up the penalty shoot-out which booked the Addicks’ place at Wembley. This matchwinner against QPR saw him tower above a posse of hooped defenders and direct a forceful downward header from Josh Cullen’s outswinging corner off Liam Kelly’s left hand and in off the right-hand post. Like Pearce, Pratley’s goal topped off another yeoman personal contribution.

With their 12th minute opener to defend, the home heroes set about the task with impressive discipline and calmness. Alongside Pearce, Tom Lockyer was outstanding, as were coldly efficient full backs in man-of-the match Adam Matthews and Deji Oshilaja. In midfield, Cullen put in his customary all-round shift and Albie Morgan continued his dramatic improvement since the Championship resumed. At wide right midfield, Aidan McGeady provided a useful outlet but was eclipsed by the all-action impact of his 60th minute replacement Alfie Doughty. who may well start at Cardiff on Tuesday. Doughty’s timely introduction relieved the modest pressure and might have brought him a welcome clinching goal. This kid’s a livewire prospect.

Faced by opponents happy to allow them possession up to a mutually agreed point, then allowing them no further in obdurate ranks of four, Rangers advanced, hesitated, square-passed meaninglessly and petered out. A first half of huffing, puffing and generally aimless pottering about produced only Ebere Eze’s perilously curling shot which passed uncomfortably close to Dillon Phillips’ right post. Meanwhile, the Addicks threatened to double their lead when Macauley Bonne ran on to Morgan’s perceptive pass, shot fiercely from a diminishing angle on the left but was denied by Kelly’s alert near post save

A minute after the interval, in creating and squandering their solitary clearcut chance, the visitors caused temperatures to rise collectively in living rooms clear across the Southland. Presented with a point blank “certainty” by Angel Rangel’s clever delivery, Jordan Hugill applied the routine finishing touch and was already planning his celebration until Phillips, making astounding ground along his goalline, blocked his shot. Pratley’s goal settled this vital game; Phillips’ incredible save made sure it did.

Almost inured to last gasp sickeners this season, Charlton’s absentee fans still feared the worst but were in good hands. Even the grisly prospect of five added minutes caused barely a ripple of inconvenience inside an eerily resonant Valley where Pearce and his defiant cohorts dispassionately stood their ground. Mark Warburton’s vanquished West Londoners had been handed a lesson in thrifty use of meagre resources. Mind you, the security of a second goal wouldn’t go unnoticed, if only to increase the life expectancy among the Addicks’ played out, locked out, worn out supporter.

Charlton: Phillips, Matthews, Lockyer, Pearce, Oshilaja (Purrington76), McGeady (Doughty 60), Cullen, Pratley, Morgan (Field 84), Bonne (Green 84), Hemed (Aneke 60). Not used: Amos, Sarr, Williams, Davison. Booked: Pratley

QPR: Kelly, Manning, Barbet, Masterson, Rangel (Kane 71), Cameron (Amos 71), Ball (Bettache 76), Eze, Chair (Shodipo 60), Osayi-Samuel (Oteh 71), Hugill. Not used: Lumley, Kakay, Gubbins, Clarke

Filed Under: Sport

Kevin Nolan’s Match Report: Hull City v Charlton (20/06/2020)

June 22, 2020 By Rob Powell

Hull City 0 Charlton 1 (Pearce 18).

By Kevin Nolan off Valley Pass.

The light at the end of the tunnel remains dim but it but glows a little more hopefully after Charlton’s vital victory over Hull City at a cavernous KC Stadium. An early setpiece goal scored by pugnacious Jason Pearce was enough to see off Grant McCann’s toothless Tigers and catapult the visitors out of the relegation zone, where they’d uncomfortably spent the past four months. Had the Addicks managed to crown their clear superiority with at least one further goal, they might have spared their long suffering fans the inevitable tension that goes with the territory. As it was, the spectre of the last gasp equaliser haunted the laptop faithful until five intolerable minutes of added time amounted to cruel and unusual punishment. More than one housebound zealot spent them crouched behind the sofa. Count me among them.

Charlton’s solitary goal was a pleasing combination of pinpoint accuracy and good, old-fashioned physicality. Aidan McGeady’s dipping volley from outside the penalty area was initially tipped over his crossbar by George Long but the resultant left wing corner turned out to be the keeper’s undoing. Swung inwards by the outstanding Josh Cullen, Tomas Hemed’s deft front door flick glanced off Long’s groping fingertips before Pearce crashed through the tradesmen’s entrance, bullying Tom Eaves and Jon Toral into the net with him as headed irresistibly inside the far post. The skipper’s “rough and rowdy ways” were exactly what necessity demanded.

Showing his customary boldness, Lee Bowyer caused more than a few eyebrows to raise with the starting line-up he named for the Humberside crunch clash. Preferring Deji Oshilaja to either Ben Purrington or Naby Sarr at left back, he also chose the enigmatic McGeady on the right of midfield, with young Albie Morgan recalled from obscurity to operate on the left. Meanwhile, Hemed got the nod alongside Macauley Bonne up front, with Andre Green a worrying absentee. A routine 4-4-2 formation vindicated his tactical nous and proceeded to outclass their woebegone hosts.A much improved McGeady and Morgan, with his playmaking  ability to pick the right pass, did their bits until replaced around the hour mark. It was in central midfield, though, where Charlton decided the issue. Cullen hardly put a foot wrong apart from wafting an acceptable chance fashioned by rampaging substitute Chuks Aneke over the bar. His blend of tenacity and skill will be crucial during the coming weeks, his contribution including the risky but precisely timed tackle which whisked the ball off Daniel Batty’s toes as the attacking midfielder shaped to shoot inside the penalty area late in the second half.

At Cullen’s elbow, Darren Pratley was his usual combative self.. Tackling and covering diligently, he ploughed through his own workload tirelessly and was always available to help elsewhere. Age hasn’t wearied the admirable veteran, nor the years condemned. You’d name him as company in a wartime trench.

There were other positives to warm Bowyer’s cockles. After a shaky start, Oshilaja settled down and combined with McGeady to create a golden opportunity to double the lead two minutes after Pearce’s opener. Sent clear on the left by McGeady’s cleverly disguised backheel, his fiercely driven low cross eluded the sliding Macauley Bonne and Hemed as it flashed to safety across Long’s goal area.

Bonne was on the end of another chance in the second half but misdirected his header wide after lively substitute Alfie Doughty cut City’s right flank open and provided the perfect cross. A second goal continued to elude the Addicks and stirred unpleasant memories that Hull had been one of many late goalscorers to frustrate them earlier in the season.Their unease intensified when Keane Lewis-Potter, scorer of the Tigers’ sickening equaliser at The Valley in December, replaced Batty with over a quarter hour left but there was to be no repetition of that disaster.

Dillon Phillips enjoyed a  virtually untroubled afternoon, a routine tip-over of Batty’s drive his only meaningful save until Long’s huge clearance caused havoc between Pearce and Tom Lockyer in the late stages, allowing Danish substitute Samuelson a rare sight of goal. The youngster’s shot on the run was competently fielded by Phillips and the Addicks were home and dry.
With the marathon which we’re regularly reminded constitutes a football season now reduced to a nine-game sprint, Charlton have burst impressively from the starting blocks. Their speed is impressive. Now comes a test of their stamina.

Hull: Long, Pennington, McDonald, De Wijs, Elder, Batty (Lewis-Potter 73), Kane, Bowler (Scott 56), Toral (Honeyman 56), Wilks (Samuelson 85), Eaves (Magennis 56. Not used: Tafazolli, Burke, Stewart, Ingram. Booked: Batty.

Charlton: Phillips, Matthews, Lockyer, Pearce, Oshilaja (Purrington 71), McGeady (Field 82), Pratley, Cullen, Morgan (Doughty 61), Bonne (Williams 82), Hemed (Aneke 72). Not used: Amos, Sarr, Oztumer, Davoson. Booked: Oshilaja, Pratley, Williams.

Referee: Darren England.

Filed Under: Sport

Kevin Nolan’s Match Report: Charlton v Middlesbrough (07/03/2020)

March 8, 2020 By Kevin Nolan

Charlton 0 Middlesbrough 1 (McNair 17).

Kevin Nolan reports from The Valley.

Another costly error. Another failure to score. Another avoidable defeat, this one plunging Charlton, for the first time this season, into the relegation zone. The search for three teams worse than themselves isn’t over but the air of desperation which spread through The Valley on Saturday suggests that self belief is in short supply.

The disastrous mistake which gifted Middlesbrough their winning goal followed the depressing format which has blighted this campaign, its most recent example being the gift presented to Huddersfield’s Karlan Grant a week earlier which began a demoralising 4-0 rout. If there’s a way of screwing up, Charlton will find one.

On this occasion, a Boro attack had foundered and the ball reached Ben Purrington safely upfield. Anxious to avoid confrontation, he attempted to find George Lapslie in support behind him but carelessly turned over possession to Rudy Gestede who promptly ran at a glacial defence. Gestede’s squared pass was efficiently sidefooted past Dillon Phillips by Paddy McNair and the Addicks were already doomed to chase a lost cause.

There were, of course, other options available to Purrington, among them a safety-first approach currently frowned on by the modern game. Had he turned and put his laces through the ball, the moment might have passed unremarked but playing out from the back is now de rigeur. Charlton are nothing if not fashionable, with Phillips following the current trend of initiating pointless passing patterns which usually end up back at his feet and are then kicked long anyway into the heart of a defence given time to prepare.

On those occasions when the keeper sprinted to his 18-yard line to launch quick clearances into the channels, the Teesiders were less secure, with Lyle Taylor a persistent nuisance and Andre Green taking his cue alongside him. Defenders don’t relish balls landing over their shoulders. That’s not in the coaching manuals but it doesn’t make it less true.

Before Boro’s 17th minute matchwinner, Green had shown the way by breaking over the halfway line with a train of defenders in his wake. His excellent cross from the right was met by a straining Taylor, who was unable to keep his running volley on target. His “miss” was promptly put into painful context by McNair’s cool finish. “It drives me mad after all we work on all week,” lamented Lee Bowyer, “and the preparation just goes out the window. We were on top and then we just give them a goal. It’s kid’s stuff and last week was the same. We need men to stand up and fight.”

Bowyer’s distress was understandable but there is an alternative. To reduce the potential for defensive error, kybosh the building from the back rigmarole, get the ball through quickly to Taylor and Co. by way of eager midfielders like Josh Cullen and Jonny Williams, and play in the opposition’s half as much as possible. There’s enough pace and power in his team to trouble moderate sides like Middlesbrough and clearly faltering Hull City next Saturday. Start Taylor, Green and Macauley Bonne up front at KCOM Stadium and go for broke. If we’re to go down, do it with a loud bang and not the acquiescent whimper we offer right now.

There were other chances for the Addicks, with Green’s goalbound effort alertly blocked by Ryan Shotton and Dejan Stojanovic instictively parrying Green’s fiercely struck drive. Deji Oshilaja headed Jonny Williams’ cross straight at the debutant goalkeeper. In the second half, lively substitute Bonne’s cross set up Darren Pratley to mangle a close range finish, while Bonne himself tamely flicked Taylor’s low delivery into the Austrian keeper’s hands.

But it was referee Stephen Martin’s decision to book Taylor for simulation rather than award him the penalty he deserved for luring Harold Moukoudi into a rash tackle inside the area that rankled. The defender clearly clipped Taylor after being fooled by his sharp turn but Martin added the insult of a yellow card to the injury he inflicted by turning down his justified appeal for a spotkick.

None of which implies that Middlesbrough were anything but reasonably comfortable winners. Phillips contributed fine saves from Marcus Tavernier and Lewis Wing as the Northerners wasted time expertly, managed the second half shrewdly and completed a 1-0 league double over the Addicks. They inflicted a body blow, no getting away from that. But it ain’t over, not yet it ain’t. With Tom Lockyer back and Naby Sarr hopefully on his way, Charlton still have a shot at safety. It all begins again at Hull. See you there.

Charlton: Phillips, Matthews, Oshilaja, Pearce, Purrington (Hemed 83), Pratley, Green, Cullen, Lapslie (Bonne 46), Williams (Doughty 66), Taylor. Not used: Amos, McGeady, Amith, Davis. Booked: Matthews, Purrington, Taylor.

Boro: Stojanovic, Howson, Shotton, Moukoudi, Johnson, Clayton, McNair (Saville 81), Tavernier (Spence 87), Wing, Coulson, Gestede. Not used: Pears, Assombalonga, Fletcher, Morrison, Nmecha. Booked: Shotton.

Referee: Stephen Martin

Filed Under: Sport

Kevin Nolan’s Match Report: Charlton v Blackburn Rovers (15/02/2020)

February 16, 2020 By Kevin Nolan

Charlton 0 Blackburn Rovers 2 (Buckley 29, Adarabioyo 37).

Kevin Nolan reports from The Valley.

Like Storm Dennis which offered bluff and bluster but thankfully little carnage locally (so far), Charlton followed their firecracker win over Nottingham Forest with the damp squib of this tame, tepid defeat by cool Blackburn Rovers. Tony Mowbray’s promotion outsiders handed the Addicks a lesson in calm, unemotional game management.

Never reluctant to tinker with a winning team, Lee Bowyer made just one, somewhat controversial change to the side which illuminated the City Ground. Despite playing his part manfully in midweek, diminutive Erhun Oztumer was possibly considered unsuited to Saturday’s filthy conditions and unlikely to make a similar impression against Mowbray’s physical Rovers. Fair enough but in his replacement Aiden McGeady, Bowyer hardly turned to a workaholic midfield hard man. McGeady’s vague, jittery contribution failed to justify his decision to drop Oztumer.

Bowyer’s dogged faith in Tomer Hemed is similarly difficult to understand. The strongly built Israeli tries hard but rarely looks likely to score. A goal would undoubtedly galvanise him – not to mention a patient crowd – but in five starts plus seven substitute appearances,  a breakthrough has looked unlikely. Either Andre Green (two goals) or the returning Macauley Bonne (eight goals) must surely start alongside Lyle Taylor in the crunch clash with Luton Town on Saturday. Both Green and Bonne featured on Saturday, significantly as replacements for Hemed and McGeady. Oztumer watched impassively from the bench.

Darren Pratley, if fit, should surely be considered ahead of David Davis, an apparent like-for-like but in fact a pale imitation of Charlton’s inspirational on-field leader. Sadly, Pratley seems to have been disappeared to join Chris Solly, last seen in the Cup defeat by West Brom on January 5th, in a mythical Room 101 where discards are never seen again nor even discussed.

There was, to be fair, no lack of effort from Bowyer’s choices but they were always second best to Mowbray’s marauders. Following a bright start, during which both Taylor and Hemed drew competent saves from Christian Walton, Rovers asserted themselves. They were denied a fairly obvious penalty when Jason Pearce manhandled Dominic Samuel inside the area but moved into the lead within the opening half hour.Setting off on a solo dribble from left to right, with intelligent decoy running by Amari’i Bell in support beside him, winger John Buckley worked himself into a position from which to unleash a crisp drive which caught a useful deflection and left Dillon Phillips helpless on its way inside the keeper’s right post.

Eight minutes later, the visitors doubled their lead with assistance from another of referee Andy Davies’ eccentric decisions. It’s taken for granted, of course, that players second guess referees even when caught holding a smoking gun but Davis’ protest that his tackle on Buckley was legitimate had an earnest ring of truth about it. Davies was unmoved, however, leaving Stewart Downing to deliver a wickedly inswinging free kick which Tosin Adarbioyo turned in from six yards.

Before the interval, Taylor’s athletically improvised header from Josh Cullen’s cross was spectacularly tipped over the bar by Walton but Charlton’s impact was minimal. Blackburn retired in good order with three points already securely in their grasp. Their sedate progress through an uneventful second half was uninterrupted by undue inconvenience, though it might have been interesting to discover where Hemed’s close range header finished up had it not bounced harmlessly off an unaware defensive head into Walton’s grateful hands. The keeper also parried Taylor’s accurately struck free kick and repeated his earlier gymnastics to divert Cullen’s powerful drive to safety, following Darragh Lenihan’s crude foul on McGeady. But the two-goal deficit was otherwise comfortably protected.

Easily beaten by a better side, the Addicks will no doubt be encouraged to chalk this setback down to experience and move on. Next Saturday’s visit from Luton Town now shapes up as this season’s most crucial game, for which Bowyer’s team selection will be critical. The Hatters have breathed life into their seemingly lost cause and will be no pushover. Is there such a thing in this crazy division?

Charlton: Phillips, Matthews, Lockyer, Pearce (Smith 46), Sarr, Doughty, Davis, Cullen, McGeady (Bonne 69), Taylor, Hemed (Green 60). Not used: Amos, Purrington, Oshilaja, Oztumer.

Blackburn: Walton, Nyambe, Lenihan, Adarabioyo, Bell, Travis, Johnson, Downing, Buckley (Bennett 84), Armstrong (Chapman, Samuel (Brereton 81). Not used: Leutwiler, Graham, Davenport, Carter. Booked: Nyambe, Bell, Lenihan, Buckley.

Referee: Andy Davies. Att: 25,363 (2083 visiting).

Filed Under: Sport

Kevin Nolan’s Match Report: Charlton v Fulham (22/01/2020)

January 23, 2020 By Kevin Nolan

Charlton 0 Fulham 0.

Kevin Nolan reports from The Valley.

At a Valley with a new, buoyant spring in its step, well-organised Charlton frustrated promotion hopefuls Fulham, achieved their first clean sheet since October 15th and added a precious point to the total they need to ensure Championship safety. The game itself was no thing of beauty but provided a savage satisfaction of its own.

There were numerous, other reasons for optimism. The return of engine room maestro Josh Cullen to the starting line-up and the charismatic  presence of Lyle Taylor on the bench provided exactly the boost a threadbare squad needed to re-energise itself. Word is they will be joined soon by other long-term absentees.

The West Londoners, meanwhile, had injury problems of their own, all of them up front. They arrived, as expected, without clever bruiser Aleksandar Mitrovic and Brighton loanee Anthony Knockaert, who had scored their recent winner against Middlesbrough. Also unavailable was Aboubakar Kamara, Mitrovic’s natural deputy, whose two goals beat QPR 2-1 two weeks ago. There was abundant skill in Fulham’s line-up but an obvious lack of cutting edge.

The reinstatement in central defence of Jason Pearce was Lee Bowyer’s solution to the worrying vulnerability which has regularly leaked goals and squandered leads. Pearce comes in for criticism from many keyboard experts but his spirit will be invaluable in the coming weeks. Always prone to at least one defensive bloodrush -the late free kick he conceded to Fulham here caused unpleasant heart murmurs – his captain’s example more than compensates, a point made by his crucial second half block on Bobby DeCordova-Reid. The no-quarter battle of Charlton’s Crazy Horse with Mitrovic at Craven Cottage in October is the stuff of legend.

After a three-month absence, Cullen took time to settle in but his influence is incalculable and his continuing good health vital. Typically he completed 90 minutes, by the end of which he was calling the shots again as the go-to midfielder. Taylor’s 70th minute re-appearance, as replacement for hardworking Tomer Hemed, whose passionate appeal for a penalty when hauled down by Michael Hector was ignored by referee Stephen Martin, also lifted The Valley and helped see them over the line to a useful result. The encouraging performance was illuminated yet again by a sterling contribution from ageless Darren Pratley.  A full complement of Addicks, strengthened by one or two transfer window arrivals, has little to fear in this division.

Chances in a grimly contested game were few. Neat in their approach but playing harmlessly in front of Charlton’s alert defence, the Cottagers made the majority of them and should have broken local hearts early in the second half. Upfield for a left wing corner, defender Michael Hector was unmarked at the far post when picked out by Ivan Cavaleiro’s precise cross. The Chelsea loanee’s free header was wastefully directed wide. In a tepid first half, Dillon Phillips made two smart saves from DeCordova-Reid, but was beaten by Joe Bryan’s fierce low crosshot as it zipped dangerously wide of his left-hand post. In defence of his rare clean sheet, Phillips was relatively untroubled during an attritional second period.

Solid and determined, Charlton offered an occasional threat. Alfie Doughty’s pace posed problems though his final ball was frequently wayward. Switched to the right flank in the second half, his clever cutback to Erhun Oztumer brought a wildly sliced effort from the diminutive fireball which flew high, wide and unhandsome on its way over Marek Rodak’s crossbar. Doughty himself pounced on an error by a tetchy.  Harry Arter and forced a rare save from Rodak.

Pleased and proud of his warriors, Bowyer can now turn his attention to the massive encounter with Barnsley at The Valley on February 1st. His squad could be bolstered by recovered invalids and new blood while the Tykes face an inconvenient Cup trip to Portsmouth on Saturday, where Dickie Bird and Michael Parkinson are expected to start. Still with only one win in their last 17 league games, the green shoots of recovery, nurtured by the return to the colours of Cullen, Taylor and the effervescent Jonny Williams, are at last poking through. The treatment rooms at Sparrows Lane are beginning to empty. We’re close to having our Charlton back…

Charlton: Phillips,Matthews, Lockyer, Pearce, Purrington, Pratley, Morgan (Williams 63), Cullen, Oztumer (Green 82), Doughty, Hemed (Taylor 70). Not used: Maynard-Brewer, Oshilaja, Sarr, Dempsey. Booked: Cullen.

Fulham: Rodak, Hector, Odoi, McDonald, Cairney (Johansen 77), Ream, DeCordova-Reid, Arter (Christie 72), Cavaleiro, Bryan, Onomah (Stansfield 88). Not used: Bettinelli, Kongolo,De la Torre, Sessegnon. Booked:Ream.

Referee: Stephen Martin. Att: 16,424 (2,337 visiting).

In memory of Barry Cawley -Richard’s dad and dedicated Fulham fan – who died recently and whose funeral takes place next Tuesday 28th, 2020. Rest in Peace, Barry –  in the Premier League hopefully.

Filed Under: Sport

Kevin Nolan’s Match Report: Derby County v Charlton (30/12/2019)

December 31, 2019 By Kevin Nolan

Derby County 2 (Knight 10,77) Charlton 1 (Taylor 83,pen)

Kevin Nolan reports from Pride Park.

The cracks in Lee Bowyer’s constantly re-jigged squad are beginning to widen and threaten to become unmanageable. Their miserable failure to beat Derby despite the home side being reduced to 10 men for all but a quarter hour of this desperately disappointing game was ominous. The strain is starting to show, with the wretchedly ill-timed loss of Boxing Day hero Macauley Bonne to suspected hamstring damage  guaranteed to add another furrow to Bowyer’s already fevered brow.

Bonne’s magnificent two-goal performance which destroyed Bristol City inspired hope that with Lyle Taylor back in scoring form, the Addicks had at their disposal a strike force to match any in the division. Instead, Bonne now joins the panel of patients in the New Eltham dispensary while Taylor is still feeling his way back to full fitness. With the January transfer window supplying its usual mishmash of truth and fiction, we’re likely to hear as much from their agents as Charlton’s medical staff. Know what I’m saying?

Passive and timid, Charlton sleepwalked their way into this vital fixture. Less than a minute had elapsed when Jason Knight sent Martyn Waghorn sauntering through their dozing defence to confront Dillon Phillips. Practised and successful recently in these one-on-one duels, Phillips spread himself to save splendidly with his legs.

The visitors wilfully ignored the warning. Starting from a free kick rolled back to Tom Lockyer by Chris Solly, their passing from the back was ponderous and ill-conceived. As space became constricted, Naby Sarr’s vague loss of possession allowed right back Andre Wisdom to cross from the touchline. A suspiciously offside Waghorn touched on for Knight to bravely head home at the far post despite Solly’s earnest attempt to decapitate him. Charlton’s catalogue of defensive errors continues to multiply.

Just five minutes after the goal, the Rams villainously compromised their bright start. The viciously late -and possibly premeditated – challenge launched by Krystian Bielik on regular target Conor Gallagher left referee Jeremy Simpson little alternative but to produce a red card. Moronically booed for his pains, Gallagher was mowed down again by Wisdom before the interval but Simpson remained unsympathetic on this occasion. Still only 19, the supremely talented Chelsea kid clearly has a price on his head. Widely popular during his successful loan spell at The Valley last season, Bielik was an out-of-character bounty hunter.

Their man-advantage failed to galvanise Bowyer’s lethargic side. The best they mustered was Deji Oshilaja’s routine header at an untroubled Ben Hamer and Bonne’s weak effort over the bar. Bonne’s obvious discomfort before the break saw him replaced by Taylor for the second half. That’s the way it goes for the Addicks lately. As one door opens, another slams shut.

Taylor’s neat lay-off for Gallagher to slice wildly over the bar began the second period promisingly enough. When Alfie Doughty drew a smart save from Hamer with a swerving shot, there was a further flicker of life but the Rams were hardly under siege. Jack Marriott broke through but missed the target woefully from the 18-yard line, then forced Phillips into a sharp save with a fiercely angled crosshot. But with 13 minutes left, Knight’s second goal doubled the lead.

Loitering with intent to the right of goal as Duane Holmes fed Max Bird on the left, the young Ram was unchallenged as he volleyed his second senior goal from four yards. That was not quite that as Curtis Davies became the latest footpad to assault Gallagher, his offence carelessly committed inside the penalty area. Taylor duly reduced the arrears from the spot and Charlton briefly sensed a chance of redemption.

Hamer did his bit to preserve Derby’s precious three points by brilliantly saving from substitute Ben Dempsey, then regaining his feet to smother Taylor’s attempt to convert the rebound. An equaliser, while more than welcome, would have obscured the unvarnished truth that Charlton are in deep trouble, not altogether of their own making, but trouble nonetheless. Bowyer has been able to rely this season an unquenchable spirit in adversity. At Pride Park, that indispensable asset went missing. His side was listless, lethargic and ultimately lifeless. They need help. They need re-invigorating. They need new bloody owners!

Derby: Hamer, Wisdom, Davies, Clarke, Bird, Holmes, Bielik, Lowe, Knight, Marriott (Whittaker 90), Waghorn (Forsyth 90). Not used: Roos, Dowell, Martin, Sibley, Malone. Booked: Holmes.

Charlton: Phillips, Solly, Lockyer, Sarr (Davison 69), Purrington, Oshilaja (Dempsey 69), Pratley, Morgan, Gallagher, Bonne (Taylor 46), Doughty. Not used: Maynard-Brewer, Matthews, Pearce, Ledley. Booked: Gallagher, Pratley, Solly, Dempsey.

Att: 26,058). Referee: Jeremy Simpson.

Filed Under: Sport

Kevin Nolan’s Match Report: Queens Park Rangers v Charlton (21/12/2019)

December 22, 2019 By Kevin Nolan

Queens Park Rangers 2 (Cameron 6, Pugh 70) Charlton 2 (Taylor 56, Sarr 90+5).

Kevin Nolan reports from Kiyan Prince Foundation Stadium.

The scenes on and off the field when referee Matt Donohue’s whistle brought this game to a close to an end after 96 pulsating minutes were all too familiar. One group of players slumped in despair while their opponents capered, screamed in jubilation and joined their supporters behind the goal in riotous assembly.

As Charlton have conceded a series of added time goals this season, it’s been their hearts that have been regularly broken. But this time the boot was firmly on QPR’s foot. Only seconds from a victory that seemed theirs for the taking and having spent the dying throes of the game camped in their visitors’ half, Rangers were shattered by an equaliser scored by unlikely hero Naby Sarr,
Sent upfield as a last desperate gesture by Lee Bowyer, Sarr had, frankly, made little impression. But his manager was aware that despite his huge frame, the popular Frenchman is capable of cool finishing under pressure. And as Dillon Phillips murmured a prayer and launched a long ball into the home penalty area, Sarr moved on to Geoff Cameron’s disastrous misheader, took a touch to steady himself and used his weaker right foot to slot an especially crucial equaliser past Joe Lumley. Although their winless streak extended to eleven games, the point they wrested from this awkward fixture could be a turning point.
Much earlier, Sarr’s defensive error had contributed to Rangers’ opening goal. His weak, wrongfooted stab at Ebere Eze’s right wing delivery found Cameron only eight yards from goal. The American’s crisp half-volley duly punished Sarr’s blunder and made Charlton’s difficult task even harder.
As the Addicks briefly wilted, sharpshooter Nahki Wells twice let them off the hook. His point blank header after Jordan Hugill nodded another fine cross from Eze back from the far post clipped the crossbar on its harmless way to safety. It was a bad miss but Wells wasn’t quite through for the afternoon. Sent clear by Ben Purrington’s dreadfully underpowered backpass, the profligate striker bore down on an advancing Phillips, with Spurs loanee Luke Amos urgently making up ground to offer support to his left. With the hopeful keeper outnumbered, a simple squared pass would have made Amos’ tap-in a mere formality. Instead Wells selfishly elected to shoot and was brilliantly blocked by Phillips; beside himself in frustration, meanwhile, Amos’ language doesn’t belong on this family website, understandable though it was at the time.
Handed an improbable lifeline, the Addicks steadied thermselves and gradually improved. Precocious kids Alfie Doughty and Albie Morgan, on as a 12th minute replacement for latest casualty Jonathan Leko, orchestrated the recovery and there was always hope with Lyle Taylor up front. The inspirational goalscorer took time to assert himself but a sharp low shot, saved smartly by Lumley, offered promise. Another of the kids -Conor Gallagher – also tested Lumley as the pendulum began to swing in the visitors’ favour.
Taylor’s twisting header hit the bar early in the second half and it was no surprise that Charlton drew level before the hour. Gallagher’s right wing corner was inconclusively cleared to Morgan, hovering just outside the penalty area. Young Albie’s powerful shot returned the ball with interest and was nimbly turned past Lumley by Taylor, the most alert player among the cluster surrounding the unsighted keeper. It was no lucky ricochet, merely the predatory reaction of a born poacher.
The removal of Wells minutes later and his replacement by the silky skills of Bright Osayi-Samuel promptly reclaimed the initiative for Mark Warburton’s men. Scorer of a wonder goal at Birmingham recently, the newcomer began to run at Charlton’s increasingly dogeared defence to devastating effect, Shimmying through two challenges, he left Jason Pearce in a tangle on his way to the right byline, before cutting back a pass which left Marc Pugh the simple job of tapping home Rangers’ second goal with 20 minutes remaining.
Still the Addicks plugged away doggedly, with Doughty’s fierce crosshot shaving the right post. But it was no more than hit-and-hope that inspired Phillips’ agricultural delivery and Cameron’s more than helpful misheader. The educated touch and calm finish by Sarr, however, was different class.
Winless now since October 19th, Charlton can hardly expect results elsewhere to keep them out of the relegation maelstrom. After all, the “kindness of strangers” upon which she depended served Blanche Dubois well in A Streetcar named Desire only until she ran into roughhouse brother-in-law Stanley Kowalski (Marlon Brando) in New Orleans and look what happened to her. I don’t have a clue what Tennessee Williams’ play has to do with Charlton’s relegation fears but I thought I’d mention it. Feeling the pressure a bit, I reckon… or just showing off.
QPR: Lumley, Kane, Hall, Leistner, Manning, Cameron, Amos (Scowen 78), Eze, Pugh (Chair 79), Wells (Osayi-Samuel 66), Hugill. Not used: Barnes, Wallace, Smith, Ball. Booked: Manning, Amos, Hugill.
Charlton: Phillips, Matthews, Lockyer, Sarr, Purrington (Pearce 27), Pratley, Gallagher, Leko (Morgan 12), Doughty (Oshilaja 88), Bonne, Taylor. Not used: Maynard-Brewer, Ledley, Solly, Dempsey. Booked: Matthews, Pratley, Purrington, Morgan.
Referee: Matt Donohue.. Att: 16,166.

Filed Under: Sport

Kevin Nolan’s Match Report: Charlton v Huddersfield Town (10/12/2019)

December 11, 2019 By Kevin Nolan

Charlton 0 Huddersfield Town 1 (Daly 90+2).

Kevin Nolan reporting from the Valley

That comforting points gap which has consoled Charlton during their disastrous two-month slump is disappearing like (as my mum was fond of saying) the snow that fell last year. The Addicks are in freefall and no amount of reassurance that they’ll be fine when their injured players return cuts the mustard. Despite their barnstorming start, this season was always about staying in the Championship, with 50 points the generally accepted minimum to aim at. Right now, they need 27 more points but if they continue to throw away useful draws, that total may turn out to be notional.

A grim, scoreless stand-off was clearly on offer when three unwanted added minutes were announced. Satisfied with their night’s work, Huddersfield’s body language made it obvious that they were ready to shake hands and call it off as sensible cricket teams do. A point’s a point, no sense risking all three, was the message conveyed by their languid attitude to throw-ins and goal kicks.

Charlton had other ideas. Despite having failed to register a single effort on target, they fancied their chances of coming up with a late winner. For a few wild seconds, it seemed that Lyle Taylor had turned the trick but Naby Sarr was ruled offside before touching the ball on to his galvanic colleague. But there was a sting left in an awful game and the visitors were about to inflict the same painful misery on their victims as Bristol City and Millwall had recently.

From a free kick on the right, Junior Bacuna’s delivery charted an uncertain course to the opposite flank, where Chris Solly was offered an opportunity to clear his lines on an anywhere-will-do basis. Instead his weak, left-footed squibber went straight to Florent Hadergjonaj, allowing the Swiss wide man to find Matt Daly inside him. The 18 year-old substitute swept his first-ever league goal, ironically enough, through Solly’s legs into the far corner and the Addicks had yet again snatched defeat from the jaws of a perfectly acceptable draw. It’s only fair to observe that Solly’s solitary error marred an otherwise solid contribution from this ultimate team man. Next time though, Chris, put your laces through the bloody ball and send it to Kingdom Come. Nobody but the purists will blame you. Trust me.

There was precious little else to encourage beleaguered boss Lee Bowyer as he prepares for the potentially season-defining visit of Hull City on Friday evening. His team has adopted a jaded, threadbare look, which can only partly be explained by a catastrophic injury list. among which Josh Cullen’s is the most sorely missed name. There is no lack of effort from the survivors but an understandable fear of making mistakes is unmanning them. Gone for the time being at least is the freewheeling, exuberant joy and cussed satisfaction they derived from defying pre-season predictions of their imminent downfall.  Bowyer’s own decisions, meanwhile, such as his preference for greenhorn James Vennings over Albie Morgan as a replacement for a third novice in Alfie Doughty, seemed an almost perverse exercise of his authority and had the amateur tacticians scratching their heads. Young Vennings was probably not alone in being surprised by his manager’s call.

Trawling through my meagre notes, meanwhile, I’ve failed to disinter so much as the whiff of a threat to Kamil Grabara’s goal. Even when Solly ran dangerously on to Macauley Bonne’s low cross intended for Taylor, his shot was capably blocked by Hadergjonaj. There was also, I believe, a first half shot from Doughty which whistled high and wide but that may be wishful thinking on my part. The Terriers were marginally more aggressive, with Dillon Phillips saving alertly from Karlan Grant and Josh Koroma early in the second half, not to mention Solly’s razor-sharp interception to deny Grant an unhindered run on goal.

Shot-shy themselves, the Addicks fired popguns at their almost equally feeble visitors. It fell to an 18-year old Terrier to produce the marksmanship necessary to separate them and send Charlton slip-sliding into what certainly looks like a crisis. It feels like a crisis. Chances are it’s a crisis. Yeah, it’s a crisis.

Charlton: Phillips, Lockyer, Pearce, Sarr, Solly, Pratley, Gallagher, Purrington, Doughty (Vennings 73), Leko (Taylor 68), Bonne. Not used: Maynard-Brewer, Matthews, Oshilaja, Ledley, Morgan. Booked: Lockyer, Gallagher, Bonne.

Huddersfield: Grabara, Hogg, Bacuna, Kachunga, Koroma (Simpson 73), Schindler, Stankovic, Hadergjonaj, Mounie (Daly 76), Edmunds-Green, Grant. Not used: Coleman, Harratt, High, Austerfield, Jackson. Booked: Kachunga, Stankovic.

Referee: Graham Scott.. Att: 13,488 (680 visiting).

Filed Under: Sport

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • …
  • 9
  • 10
  • 11
  • 12
  • 13
  • …
  • 42
  • Next Page »

Visit the Old Royal Naval College

Book tickets for the Old Royal Naval College

Recent Posts

  • Kevin Nolan’s Match Report: Charlton v Chelsea U-21 (29/10/24)
  • Kevin Nolan’s Match Report: Barnsley v Charlton (22/10/24)
  • Kevin Nolan’s Match Report: Bristol Rovers v Charlton (1/10/24)
  • Kevin Nolan’s Match Report: Cambridge United v Charlton (17/09/24)

Greenwich.co.uk © Uretopia Limited | About/Contact | Privacy Policy